Resilience: Stories of Triumph
This Head Start Awareness Month, we’re celebrating the resilience and triumph of our Head Start alumni. Dr. Shana Lachowicz, director of Child Development at Community Partnership for Child Development in Colorado Springs, CO, is the first of the series. Thank you, Dr. Lachowicz for sharing your Head Start story.
The soundtrack of my life could be “The Long and Winding Road” by the Beatles. My journey has been winding roads, a lot of steep hills, a few detours, some dead-ends, and a few instances of going the wrong way down one-way streets. But I found my way. Everything about me on paper says I should be a statistic. But instead, I recently celebrated 17 years of employment with Head Start. My son is thriving and has never been financially eligible for Head Start.With Head Start, I have seen the power of relational support systems, I have found my love for education, and my resolve to succeed despite tragedy and turmoil has only been strengthened. Like so many others, Head Start has been integral to how I live and why I do what I do.
Family Dynamics
My parents grew up in Yonkers, New York, and I was born in the Bronx. While I was young, my family moved to Mahopac, New York, in Putnam County. At home, I lived with my parents, older sister, and twin brother. My dad's brother lived nearby, and my siblings and I played often and attended school with our cousins. Dad was a self-employed cabinet maker, and my mother was sick with cancer. Dad did his best to care for mom and us kids, but it wasn't easy. So when someone told him about free preschool, he jumped at the opportunity. The preschool was Head Start.
Bittersweet Memories

Time to Grow Up
Life after Head Start took many twists and turns. With my mother's passing, I had to grow up fast. As a single dad, my father did his best to look after me and my siblings and keep a roof over our heads and food on the table, but it was hard. I had severe ADHD, which led to difficulties in school. Socially, children teased me about not having a mother. I would often lie about my mom and pretend to have one. Once I got to high school, my relationships with teachers were hit or miss. I either really connected with them, or I really didn't. Additionally, I was smoking, drinking, and getting high–all driven by trauma. I just wanted to be numb. Coincidentally and fortuitously, during my senior year of high school, I interned at the Westchester Community Opportunity Program (WestCOP) Head Start in an early intervention classroom. This experience ignited something in me. I decided to go into early childhood education. After high school, I moved toward that goal by enrolling in a community college. Unfortunately, my struggles with drugs and alcohol followed me onto campus, and I was expelled. Despite these challenges, I was determined to move forward. I returned to WestCOP Head Start as an assistant. With Head Start's support, I re-enrolled in school, this time at Westchester Community College in Valhalla, New York, and received my associate's degree. Head Start invested in me and enabled me to stay in school financially. I stayed with the WestCOP program for three years.I was able to find my way again and became more stable and responsible at this point in my life. I wanted to expand my knowledge as an early childhood educator. I took a job at a pediatric rehabilitation center for medically fragile children. Working there gave me experience working with children with complex medical needs, something I draw from to this day.
Not a Statistic

A Winding Road Still Has a Destination
Head Start initiates the first leg of a journey to self-sufficiency through access to high-quality early education, medical and dental screenings, supportive relationships, home visits, and employment development. Some diminish and even attempt to dismiss Head Start's power and place in the fight to decrease poverty. What detractors fail to grasp is that just because the journey is a winding road, that doesn't make the destination unreachable. I’m living proof.